Children’s picture books on diversity and inclusion, reviewed by young people with disability
Star ratings
Can’t wait to reread! Can’t stop thinking about the pictures, words, characters! No book is entirely perfect, but this book has us happy, excited and wanting children to read it.
We enjoyed this book from beginning to end – a truly great read. We like the story, the characters, the messages and the illustrations. Truly superb – but perhaps just missing something to be perfect.
We feelneutral about this book – maybe a little underwhelmed. We liked the book, but we’re still not sure about a few parts.
We probably won’t recommend this book. This book wasn’t complete nonsense. It definitely wasn’t good but wasn’t completely bad. We liked the story or the illustrations, but felt overall that the book lacked purpose.
This book kind ofseemed ableist or gives the wrong impression of children with disability. It might lack story, contain boring characters, or maybe it is packed with misinformation.
"Equality! The colourful illustrations showed a good understanding of equality - People with and without disability, different genders and various skin colours."
"I loved this book so much, the colours, the illustrations, the way there was representation of so many different disabilities, body types, skin tones and ethnicities etc"
"I really like how it spells out emotions and how it increases vocabulary with a whole emotion index at the back describing how it feels in an easy-to-understand way."
"I love all the questions that can stem from this book, but it needs a teacher that know what to say to get them thinking about what questions they can ask."
"I liked that it showed the perspective of a teacher and classmates learning to understand behaviour that they may initially categorise as ‘strange’ or ‘different’."
"The highlight is the discussion questions page at the end that parents can use to maximize this opportunity to talk about how to use their empathy and turn it into action."
"This young family aimed children's book contained effective illustrations, a clear plot, simple characters and a good message, however, it lacked authenticity and a super clear purpose."
"There was a missed opportunity to include diversity by having children with hearing aides, glasses, visible disabilities such as Downs Syndrome or sensory issues such as wearing ear protection or a hoodie."
"I like how on almost every page it asks a question about what that page is talking about like playing with friends or bullies asking for the classes input and makes them think about it."
"It was a great way of showing how some young people fly under the radar or ‘don’t seem autistic’, and that it’s not helpful and leads to a lack of understanding around their access needs."
"One commendable aspect of this book is its potential to serve as a starting point for families to discuss issues related to disability and neurodiversity."